In the 1960 's, doctors and nurses began using life - saving surgery called CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation). Some life - threatening diseases may shrink by saving lives, so some people refuse to perform cardiopulmonary resuscitation. While this may be true, people can prevent deadly diseases by vaccinating and / or using CPR First Aid Kit. As it becomes the theme of cardiopulmonary resuscitation, most of us will agree that this life-saving procedure is essential for everyone.
The doctor 's unrecoverable (DNR) order in the medical record informs the medical staff that CPR should not be attempted. Since CPR has not been attempted, other resuscitation procedures (such as cardiac shock and artificial respiration to the respiratory tract) will also be avoided. This order helps prevent unnecessary and unnecessary invasive treatment at the terminal stage. The success rate close to CPR's life is very low. (See also the summary of legal and ethical issues in medical care.)
In this article I will explain the success rate of CPR and what should not be done. These symptoms are patients or drugs refusing to intervene and physicians estimate that CPR can not achieve the patient's clinical care goal. We also examined the reasons for low frequency of discussion on resuscitation and evidence of discrepancies between patient preferences and physician's assumptions on actual patient needs. We provide guidance on how to smooth these discussions and how to write orders. This is a classic and well-thought paper that advises patients about autonomy in a dying decision and should be familiar to all doctors.
This article is accompanied by the revised cardiopulmonary resuscitation guidelines of the American Heart Association and examines legal and cultural issues related to ethical principles and resuscitation decisions for patients of all ages including newborns and children I will. Do not try high-level topics being discussed - recovery orders, futile, emotional support for families, family presence during recovery attempts, organ and organization donations, recovery studies, and new Execution procedure for execution. This manuscript also reviewed the criteria for ending CPR in an out-of-hospital and in-hospital setting, including a summary of the literature on the prognosis of children and adult patients after cardiac arrest.